Method and device for synthesizing radioactive methyl iodine tracer

ABSTRACT

Disclosed is a method and device for simply and safely preparing, using a direct synthesis process at room temperature, a radioactive methyl iodine (CH 3   131 I) tracer for use in evaluating the ability of impregnated activated carbon to adsorb radioactive organic iodine according to ASTM D 3803 (Standard Test Method for Nuclear-Grade Activated Carbon), in which the tracer can be directly synthesized by mixing radioactive sodium iodide (Na 131 I) with methyl iodine (CH 3 I) at room temperature under reduced pressure, thus shortening excessive synthesis time and decreasing the probability of radiation exposure due to leakage of volatile material during the distillation.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application claims priority to Korean Patent Application No. 10-2011-0012951, filed on Feb. 14, 2011, and all the benefits accruing therefrom under 35 U.S.C. §119, the contents of which in its entirety are herein incorporated by reference.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Technical Field

The present invention relates to a method and device for synthesizing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer, and more particularly to a method and device for synthesizing a radioactive methyl iodine tracer suitable for use in evaluating the ability of impregnated activated carbon to adsorb radioactive organic iodine according to ASTM D 3803 (Standard Test Method for Nuclear-Grade Activated Carbon).

2. Description of the Related Art

Performance of impregnated activated carbon used in nuclear power plants must be strictly tested. In order to evaluate the ability of impregnated activated carbon to remove radioactive organic iodine, a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer is utilized under high humidity and atmospheric conditions.

Conventionally, radioactive methyl iodine is synthesized using a device of FIG. 1 by subjecting an anhydrous methanol solution and a concentrated sulfuric acid (c-H₂SO₄) solution to mixing, stirring and cooling, adding sodium iodide powder (6.0 g when using 5.2 ml of the anhydrous methanol solution and 1.2 ml of the concentrated sulfuric acid solution) with stirring, performing refluxing at 40° C. and heat distillation, thus separating a secondary reaction product, adding a 5% sodium thiosulfate (Na₂S₂O₃) aqueous solution to the secondary reaction product thus isolating methyl iodine, separating the sodium thiosulfate solution layer from the secondary reaction product, and performing washing using distilled water, thereby preparing a radioactive methyl iodine solution at a yield of about 40%. Specifically, the total five steps are applied.

Step 1: Synthesis of methyl iodine (10° C., 30 min)

2CH₃OH+H₂SO₄→(CH₃O)₂SO₂+2H₂O, (CH₃O)₂SO₂+2Na¹²⁷I→2CH₃ ¹²⁷I+Na₂SO₄   (1)

Step 2: Substitution of methyl iodine and radioactive iodine (40° C., 30 min)

2CH₃ ¹²⁷I+2Na¹³¹I

CH₃ ¹²⁷I+CH₃ ¹³¹I+Na¹²⁷I+Na¹³¹I   (2)

Step 3: distillation of methyl iodine (60° C., 7 hours)

CH₃OH+CH₃ ¹²⁷I+CH₃ ¹³¹I+2H₂O+¹²⁷I₂+(Na¹²⁷I+Na¹³¹I+Na₂SO₄)↓→CH₃OH+CH₃ ¹²⁷I+CH₃ ¹³¹I+2H₂O+¹²⁷I₂   (3)

Step 4: Removal of iodine (30° C., 5 min)

CH₃ ¹²⁷I+CH₃ ¹³¹I+CH₃OH+H₂O+(¹²⁷I₂+Na₂S₂O₃)←→CH₃ ¹²⁷I+CH₃ ¹³¹I+CH₃OH+H₂O   (4)

Step 5: Removal of methyl alcohol and aqua (30° C., 5 min)

CH₃ ¹²⁷I+CH₃ ¹³¹I+CH₃OH+(H₂O+CaCl₂)←→CH₃ ¹²⁷I+CH₃ ¹³¹I   (5)

Briefly, the conventional mechanism for synthesizing a radioactive iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer includes substituting the (CH₃O)₂SO₂ intermediate compound in an aqueous solution state with ¹³¹I in the steps 1 and 2, thus synthesizing CH₃ ¹³¹I.

Because the tracer thus synthesized is present together with a variety of reagents, it is distilled so that volatile H₂O, CH₃OH, CH₃ ¹²⁷I, and CH₃ ¹³¹I are distilled from various mixtures, after which only CH₃ ^(127, 131)I should be purified. As such, only the step 3 including reflux and distillation requires 7 hours or longer, and after completion of the final step 5, about 1 ml of radioactive iodine tracer (CH₃ ¹³¹I) may be obtained.

The conventional method of preparing a radioactive methyl iodine tracer is problematic because the radioactive material sodium iodide (Na¹³¹I) should be handled for a considerable period of time (about 10 hours), and thus workers may be increasingly subjected to external exposure from radioactive sodium iodide due to leakage of the volatile material during the distillation and to internal and external exposure from radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I).

Furthermore, the conventional method is very complicated because of using radioactive materials such as sodium iodide (Na¹³¹I), and chemicals such as anhydrous methyl alcohol, concentrated sulfuric acid, sodium thiosulfate, calcium chloride, etc., with the use of a water bath, a low-temperature cooler, a distiller, etc.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Therefore, the present inventors have intensively and extensively studied minimizing the probability of radiation exposure due to leakage of volatile material during distillation while reducing the synthesis time, and thus have devised a simple device for synthesizing radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I), thereby completing the present invention.

The present invention has been made keeping in mind the above problems encountered in the related art, and the present invention is intended to provide a method and device for simply and safely synthesizing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer.

An aspect of the present invention provides a method of preparing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer using a direct synthesis process comprising mixing radioactive sodium iodide (Na¹³¹I) with methyl iodine (CH₃I) at room temperature under reduced pressure.

Another aspect of the present invention provides a simple device for preparing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 shows a conventional device for synthesizing a radioactive methyl iodine (OH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer;

FIG. 2 shows a photograph of a device for synthesizing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer according to the present invention, which is mounted;

FIG. 3 shows the device for synthesizing radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) according to the present invention;

FIG. 4 shows the methyl iodine condenser-collector of the device for synthesizing radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) according to the present invention;

FIG. 5 shows the methyl iodine-vapor fractionation unit and the condensate separator of the device for synthesizing radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) according to the present invention; and

FIG. 6 shows a graph of changes in specific radioactivity of radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) prepared according to the present invention.

DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS

Hereinafter, a detailed description will be given of the present invention.

The present invention pertains to a method of preparing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer using a direct synthesis process.

FIG. 2 shows a photograph of a device for synthesizing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer using a direct synthesis process according to the present invention, which is mounted. Specifically, the synthesis method according to the present invention includes (a) substituting methyl iodine (CH₃I) with radioactive iodine (¹³¹I); and (b) extracting radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I)

In the method according to the present invention, substitution able to obtain a desired isotope tracer from a water-soluble material (NaI) and a water-insoluble organic compound (CH₃I) which do not dissolve in each other does not occur. However, in the case where the water-soluble material (NaI) is radioactive, substitution actively takes place at the boundary of two materials because the radical of iodine is produced by the radiation energy of the material itself.

Using beta (β) and gamma (γ) radiation energy (β_(max)=0.606 MeV, γ=0.364 MeV) of the radioactive material itself, the isotope usable as the tracer may simply be prepared by substitution, which is represented below.

CH₃ ¹²⁷I (solv)+Na¹³¹I+β, γ energy

CH₃. (radical)+¹²⁷I. (radical)

¹²⁷I.+Na⁺+¹³¹I⁻

¹²⁷I⁻+Na⁺+¹³¹I.

¹²⁷I⁻+Na⁺+¹³¹I.+CH₃.

CH₃ ¹²⁷I (solv)+Na⁺+¹²⁷I⁻

The method of preparing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer using a direct synthesis process according to the present invention is specified below.

Step 1: Substitution of methyl iodine and radioactive iodine (20° C., 5 min)

2CH₃ ¹²⁷I (org. solv)+Na¹³¹I (aqua)

CH₃(¹²⁷I+¹³¹I) (org. solv)+Na(¹²⁷I+¹³¹I) (aqua)   (6)

Step 2: Extraction of radioactive methyl iodine (20° C., 5 min)

CH₃(¹²⁷I+¹³¹I)+Na(¹²⁷I+¹³¹I)+H₂O→CH₃ ¹²⁷I+CH₃ ¹³¹I   (7)

Consequently, the method according to the present invention adopts a direct synthesis process including directly mixing radioactive sodium iodide (Na¹³¹I) and non-radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹²⁷I) as the organic solvent which do not mix with each other, at room temperature, thus synthesizing radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) and a remainder, which are then separated from each other using distillation. Thereby, it is possible to prepare the radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer using the above two steps.

TABLE 1 Conditions and Results of Synthesizing Inventive and Conventional Radioactive Methyl Iodine Tracer Inventive Conventional RI Tracer Na¹³¹I 3 ml (5 mCi) Na¹³¹I 3 ml (5 mCi) Reagent RI (Radioactive RI (Radioactive Isotope), Isotope) CH₃OH (4.2 ml) Conc- CH₃ ¹²⁷I (2 ml) H₂SO₄ (1.2 ml) Na¹²⁷I (6 g), Na₂S₂O₃, CaCl₂ Ice, H₂O Synthesis Time 6 hr 10 hr Test Time 10 min 100 min Product (CH₃ ¹²⁷I + CH₃ ¹³¹I) (CH₃ ¹²⁷I + CH₃ ¹³¹I) 3 ml 1 ml Yield 50% 40%

In addition, the present invention pertains to a simple device that synthesizes the radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer.

FIG. 3 shows the device for synthesizing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer according to the present invention. The device for synthesizing a radioactive methyl iodine tracer according to the present invention includes a radioactive methyl iodine synthesis flask 101, a pressure reducing valve 102, a methyl iodine-vapor fractionation unit 103, a methyl iodine-vapor condensate separator 104, and a gaseous methyl iodine condenser-methyl iodine condensate collector 105.

The device according to the present invention enables the condensation and recovery of methyl iodine gasified in the device by means of low-temperature distillation using cold water or ice without the use of a power source, and the gaseous methyl iodine condenser-methyl iodine condensate collector 105 includes an uncinate guiding unit for preventing the condensate from dropping straight down.

With reference to FIG. 2, functions and properties of respective parts of the device according to the present invention are specified below.

In the present invention, substitution of methyl iodine and radioactive iodine and extraction of radioactive methyl iodine are carried out, and the radioactive methyl iodine synthesis flask 101 provides the reaction space required to substitute methyl iodine and radioactive Na¹³¹I.

The pressure reducing valve 102 plays a role in reducing the inner pressure of the device to induce the evaporation of organic solvent namely methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹²⁷I) so that the organic solvent is fractionated from aqueous Na¹³¹I, and the methyl iodine-vapor fractionation unit 103 functions as a guide tube that enables the gasified CH₃(¹²⁷I+¹³¹I) to move upwards and the vapor having a boiling point of 100° C. to move downwards, thus increasing the separation of methyl iodine and vapor. Thereby, the present invention obviates the need for an additional humidifying agent (H₂O+CaCl₂) for removing aqua.

The methyl iodine-vapor condensate separator 104 collects methyl iodine. If aqua is present, methyl iodine having high specific gravity remains behind due to a difference in the specific gravity of the two solutions, whereas water having low specific gravity overflows, thus obtaining pure methyl iodine. The gaseous methyl iodine condenser-methyl iodine condensate collector 105 condenses the gaseous methyl iodine in the upper recessed portion thereof using cold water or ice in order to aid the condensation of methyl iodine having a boiling point of about 42° C. Furthermore, the uncinate glass tube provided to the lower portion thereof enables the condensed methyl iodine to flow down along the wall of the device.

A better understanding of the present invention may be obtained via the following example which is set forth to illustrate, but is not to be construed as limiting the present invention.

EXAMPLE 1

A Na¹³¹I solution and an organic solvent CH₃ ¹⁷I solution, which do not mix with each other, were mixed using a radioactive methyl iodine synthesis flask 101 of the device of FIG. 2, and the CH₃I sample was diluted 10,000 times (10 μl was absorbed by 100 ml of impregnated activated carbon) at different times ranging from 0.1 hours to 16 hours and then the nuclear species thereof were analyzed using an HPGe gamma spectroscopy system (Lennie 2000, Canberra, USA) for 200 sec, thus obtaining specific radioactivity values of ¹³¹I (Table 2).

As such, in order to analyze nuclear species, the specific radioactivity values of ¹³¹I were measured two times and then averaged. Furthermore, changes in the specific radioactivity of 0.3645 MeV which is the major gamma energy peak and 0.6370 MeV which is the minor gamma energy peak are shown in FIG. 6.

In the method according to the present invention, the activated I. radical reaction occurred due to the beta and gamma energy (β_(max)=0.606 MeV (P=89%), γ=0.364 MeV (P=81%)) of ¹³¹I at the boundary of the two solutions resulting from mixing the radioactive isotope Na¹³¹I aqueous solution and the volatile organic solvent CH₃ ¹²⁷I.

Hence, 2I.→I₂ was not produced in the reaction of CH₃ ¹²⁷I+Na¹³¹I+H₂O, whereas the production of I₂ could be seen upon reaction with Na¹³¹I. Because the radioactive substitution is not the volume reaction but is the area reaction, specific radioactivity increased as a primary function over time for 6 hours as shown in FIG. 5. When 16 hours elapsed after 6 hours, specific radioactivity increased by about 3% (453.5→465.8 Bq/ml). Thus, when conducted for 6 hours the reaction is considered to be close to equilibrium.

The evaporation process resulted in 472.2 Bq/ml similar to when using a direct synthesis process. The intensities of radioactivity of the tracers obtained using two synthesis processes satisfied requirements (10³-10⁵ cpm) of ASTM D 3803 (actual value was 2.5×10⁴ cpm).

The actual test time and whether there is leakage of the volatile material during the test are regarded as important in terms of radiation defense. The conventional evaporation synthesis process should handle 5 mCi RI (radioactive isotope) for 100 min or longer, whereas the direct synthesis process according to the present invention requires about 10 min to mix and separate, ultimately reducing the test time to 1/10 times, and also, the direct synthesis process obviates the need for evaporation, thus minimizing the probability of leaking the tracer.

TABLE 2 Specific Radioactivity of CH₃ ¹³¹I synthesized using Direct Synthesis according to the Present Invention I-131 Activity I-131 Activity of of Primary Light Secondary Light Peak (Bq/ml) Peak (Bq/ml) Time (h) 1^(st) 2^(nd) Average 1^(st) 2^(nd) Average   0.1 9.63 9.66 9.64 8.47 8.84 8.64   0.2 26.79 25.74 26.26 24.40 24.24 24.32   0.5 44.22 39.92 42.07 42.82 38.48 40.65 1 119.4 113.2 116.3 116.9 110.0 113.5 2 167.9 169.2 168.5 156.9 160.4 158.7 4 287.8 293.8 290.8 277.3 284.5 280.9 6 450.2 456.7 453.5 437.8 437.8 437.8 16  453.4 478.0 465.7 429.5 460.4 445.0 Former 467.9 476.4 472.2 459.0 450.3 454.7

As described hereinbefore, the present invention provides a method and device for synthesizing a radioactive methyl iodine tracer. According to the present invention, radioactive sodium iodide (Na¹³¹I) and methyl iodine (CH₃I) can be mixed at room temperature under reduced pressure, thus directly synthesizing the tracer, thereby shortening excessive synthesis time and decreasing the probability of radiation exposure due to leakage of volatile material during distillation.

Although the embodiments of the present invention have been disclosed for illustrative purposes, those skilled in the art will appreciate that a variety of different modifications, additions and substitutions are possible, without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as disclosed in the accompanying claims. Accordingly, such modifications, additions and substitutions should also be understood as falling within the scope of the present invention. 

1. A method of preparing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer using a direct synthesis process, comprising: (1) substituting methyl iodine (CH₃I) with radioactive iodine (¹³¹I); and (2) extracting radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I).
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the substituting the methyl iodine with the radioactive iodine in (1) is performed at 20° C. for 5 min.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the extracting the radioactive methyl iodine in (2) is performed at 20° C. for 5 min.
 4. A device for preparing a radioactive methyl iodine (CH₃ ¹³¹I) tracer, comprising a radioactive methyl iodine synthesis flask, a pressure reducing valve, a methyl iodine-vapor fractionation unit, a methyl iodine-vapor condensate separator, and a gaseous methyl iodine condenser-methyl iodine condensate collector.
 5. The device of claim 4, wherein the radioactive methyl iodine synthesis flask is used to perform substituting methyl iodine with radioactive iodine.
 6. The device of claim 4, wherein the pressure reducing valve is used to reduce an inner pressure of the device in order to induce evaporation of an organic solvent CH₃ ¹²⁷I so that the organic solvent is fractionated from aqueous Na¹³¹I.
 7. The device of claim 4, wherein the methyl iodine-vapor fractionation unit functions as a guide tube so that gasified CH₃(¹²⁷I+¹³¹I) is moved upwards and vapor is moved downwards thus increasing separation of methyl iodine and vapor.
 8. The device of claim 4, wherein the methyl iodine-vapor condensate separator enables methyl iodine having high specific gravity to remain behind due to a difference in specific gravity, thus collecting pure methyl iodine.
 9. The device of claim 4, wherein the gaseous methyl iodine condenser-methyl iodine condensate collector comprises a condenser for aiding condensation of methyl iodine and a collector for collecting condensed methyl iodine.
 10. The device of claim 9, wherein the condenser condenses the gaseous methyl iodine in an upper recessed portion thereof using cold water or ice.
 11. The device of claim 9, wherein the collector includes an uncinate glass tube at a lower portion thereof so that the condensed methyl iodine flows down along a wall of the device. 